Federer Among Top Seeds to Advance to Brisbane Semis

January 9, 2015 | By Long Island Tennis Magazine Staff
Roger_Federer
Photo credit: USTA

The top four seeds at the Brisbane International have advanced to the tournament’s semifinals, after the field of eight was cut down to four on Friday. The field’s top seed, Roger Federer, made quick work of his quarterfinal opponent James Duckworth. Federer beat the Australian 6-0, 6-1 and needed just 41 minutes to do so.

“I was very happy the way I played,” said Federer. “I played aggressive, served well, and then especially on the return I kept pressure on time and time again. Next thing you know, it was like I was running away with the score.”

The Swiss won eight straight games at one point, before Duckworth finally held serve to pull within 1-2 in the second frame. From there, Federer put Duckworth away by winning the next four games. 

“We all have days that aren’t as good as others,” said Duckworth of his performance bit of a combination of things: me not playing great; didn’t probably hit the ball as well as I had the last two matches, and Roger was seeing the ball pretty big.

He didn’t do too much wrong tonight.”

Federer won 25 of his 30 service points overall and is now two wins away from becoming the third player in the Open Era to reach 1,000 career match wins.

Up next for the second-ranked player in the world is fourth-seeded Grigor Dimitrov. The two are scheduled to play an exhibition match at Madison Square Garden in March, but will first do battle in Brisbane with hopes of reaching the first final of the year.

Dimitrov knocked off Slovak Martin Klizan 6-3, 6-4 to push through into the semifinals. The Bulgarian fired seven aces and notched four break points to move past Klizan in one hour and 12 minutes.

The other semifinal will feature second-seeded Kei Nishikori of Japan and third-seeded Canadian Milos Raonic, a rematch of the epic round of 16 match the two played at last summer’s US Open.

Nishikori put together an impressive performance over Australian Bernard Tomic in their semifinal match. His return game was on display as he created 16 break point opportunities, and despite only converting four, rolled past Tomic in less than an hour.

Raonic had a much tougher time with his final four opponent as he took on Australian Sam Groth. The big-serving Canadian got a taste of his own medicine with Groth firing 22 aces and winning points on 78 percent of his first serves.

Groth notched the only break point of the match but still fell short in the third-set tiebreaker. Raonic displayed his experience and toughness, gutting out the 7-6(5), 3-6, 7-6(2) victory.

“I actually think I had the better of the match until both tiebreakers,” said Groth. “I think that’s the next step for me. Against these better guys, they don’t give you anything in the big moments.”

 


Long Island Tennis Magazine Staff
Centercourt
Oneononedoubles banner art resize

March/April 2024 Digital Edition